Somerset coastline hits rock bottom

Friday 20th March 2015 was special for a number of reasons. Early that morning saw everyone gathering outside their office buildings or schools with bits of cardboard boxes, strange glasses or at the more technological end of things, cameras and telescopes.

It was a total solar eclipse, and though unfortunately shrouded by cloud in many areas of the UK, it was still a momentous event that is not due to be repeated for almost 80 years. It also occurred on the spring equinox - the day that the sun is directly overhead the Earth's equator and which marks the beginning of spring.

But alongside the solar eclipse and the spring equinox, was another, perhaps less talked about, phenomenon. These two astronomical events also happened to coincide with a super moon - an event that occurs when either a new moon or full moon happens at the same time as it makes its closest approach to Earth.

There are actually several super moons every year, but in tandem with the solar eclipse, the pull of the moon on the Earth's tides has been exceptionally strong and resulted in the lowest tides on the Somerset coastline in over 200 years.

Stretches of beach that have not been uncovered by the sea for two centuries were now going to be revealed, along with strange and unusual marine life that never normally sees the light of day. So on Saturday morning, I picked up my cameras and went down to Minehead Beach to see it for myself.

It was quite an amazing feeling, both to be standing somewhere that had not been accessible for 200 years but also to be viewing these fantastic creatures firsthand that normally could only be seen in books or on the internet.